Washington Times
Tuesday, July 19, 2005
Bush refuses to support
bid for Security Council
By Ashish Kumar Sen
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
President Bush yesterday acknowledged India as a responsible state with advanced
nuclear technology but declined to endorse its bid for a permanent seat on the
U.N. Security Council.
After a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the White House,
Mr. Bush said he supports civil nuclear energy cooperation with India as it
realizes its goals of promoting nuclear power and achieving energy security.
The White House also said it would seek to adjust U.S. laws and policies, as
well as international regimes, to enable civil nuclear cooperation and trade
with India.
Mr. Singh, who is on a three-day official visit to Washington, pledged that
India would be ready to assume the same responsibilities and practices, and
acquire the same benefits and advantages, as other leading countries with
advanced nuclear technology.
These responsibilities include identifying and separating civilian and military
nuclear facilities and programs and filing a declaration regarding its civilian
facilities with the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Ashley J. Tellis, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, said it will become "increasingly obvious over time that the Bush
administration will have diminishing incentives to accept these burdens if India
is unable to demonstrate a new willingness to ally itself with American
purposes."
In a report, Mr. Tellis said that unless Indian security managers make conscious
efforts to shape their national policies to promote at least tacit coordination
with, if not extensive support for, U.S. goals, the strategic partnership that
both sides seek will remain elusive.
Despite Western pressure, India has resisted joining the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty or any of the multilateral export-control arrangements.
Both leaders yesterday reiterated their commitment to playing a leading role in
international efforts to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, including nuclear, chemical, biological and radiological weapons.
Mr. Singh praised Mr. Bush's "steadfast determination and leadership" in the war
on international terrorism. This, he said, "is widely appreciated by us, in
particular, but all the world, all civilized men and women all over the world."
Addressing a joint press conference at the White House with Mr. Bush, Mr. Singh
said India has a "compelling case" for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security
Council, but Mr. Bush refused to back New Delhi's bid.
Washington has endorsed only Japan's candidacy and has called for more time to
examine various options for reforming the council and the entire United Nations.
At a briefing later in the day, R. Nicholas Burns, undersecretary of state for
political affairs, said Mr. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told
the Indians that the United States was opposed to a vote to enlarge the
15-member council.